I'm nosy by nature. It's why I look for meaning in details like the bump on a person's nose or the narrative inside a photograph. When I make these observations, I feel that I know something no one else does.

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

A New York magazine
report on New York Fashion Week revealed the “easy” American aesthetic of the
runway collections by balancing the use of warm, bright words with cold, dark
words.

Renowned fashion critic Cathy Horyn’s report
“American Fashion Confronts America” featured the above photo of supermodel Natasha
Poly backstage at the Michael Kors show as the cover photo for “The Cut”
section. Natasha embodied the duality Horyn observed in the collections and
imbued in the article’s language. The gold, metallic leopard brocade of her
dress “reflected” an “irresistible rich bitch” aura with slick “sun-bleached”
hair. She grasped her metallic handbag with “tension.”

Natasha grasped the handbag as if she were
squeezing the life’s blood from it. It’s a perfect pose of strength to go with
the title “American Fashion Confronts America.” Her power pose evoked the
violent side of Horyn’s language connecting to the words “colliding, tension,
forceful, coldly, killer and hellholes. Yet the liquidity of her somewhat wet
hair and wrap dress exuded ease.

Read these full sentences that use some of the above words and prepare for the
profound.

“Simons exposed the enormous opportunity for
fashion to begin reflecting the tensions and hopes colliding on the American
stage.”

“It was haunting and expansive too—like movies that
depict sun-bleached hellholes on the Fourth of July.”